celebrities with addictions

Marco Pantani versus Lance Armstrong, Tour De France 2000  CLICK HERE TO WATCH.

Marco Pantani (January 13, 1970 – February 14, 2004) was an Italian road racing cyclist, widely considered one of the best climbers in professional road bicycle racing.[1][2] He won both the Tour de France and the Giro d'Italia in 1998, being the first Italian since Felice Gimondi in 1965 to win the Tour de France.

His attacking style and aggressive riding turned him into a fan favorite in the late 1990s. He was known as 'Il Pirata' because of his shaved head and the bandana and earrings he always wore.[3] His style contrasted with that of time-trialling experts such as the five-times Tour winner Miguel Indurain.[4]

Despite the fact that he never tested positive, his career was beset by doping allegations. In the 1999 Giro d'Italia, he was expelled due to his irregular blood values. Although he was disqualified for "health reasons", it was implied that Pantani's high haematocrit was the product of EPO use. Following later accusations, Pantani went into a depression from which he never fully recovered. He died of acute cocaine poisoning in 2004

LISA MARIE PRESLEY ON THE DEATH OF MICHAEL JACKSON
https://http://www.oprah.com/showinfo/Lisa-Marie-Presley-Speaks-Out-About-the-Death-of-Michael-Jackson   Interview re. Drug misuse and the tragic results especially for those left behind.

Press Here:  Jeff Buckley sings Hallelujah.
Tim Buckley, was a singer-songwriter who released a series of highly acclaimed  and  albums in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Buckley said he only met him once at the age of eight. After his father died of a drug overdose in 1975, he chose to go by Buckley and his real first name, which he found on his birth certificate.To members of his family he remained "Scotty".
Jeff singer songwriter died from a drowning accident.  His father whose father's family were emigrants to the US from Cork in Ireland, died from a drug overdose.

Published: August 11, 2009

Celebrities with addictions

For decades now, drug consumption and dependency have played a notorious role in the lives of Hollywood stars. But now a new type of addiction is growing increasingly prevelant among the rich and famous. More and more celebrities today are falling prey to prescription drug abuse. Recent victims include Oscar-winning actor Heath Ledger, guitar legend Jimi Hendrix and sex symbol Anna Nicole Smith, who was found dead in a pool of her own blood in a hotel room in 2007. Forensics found nine different types of medication in her blood. In the 150 days leading up to her death, Smith is said to have taken around 8100 pills – enough to have killed her several times over.

According to an exclusive rehabilitation unit in Malibu, there are now more prescription drug addicts in America than those dependent on heroin and cocaine put together. “Everyone’s on something“, says 24-year-old singer Kelly Osbourne, who checked into a rehab clinic for the third time last January with an addiction to painkillers. She has been fighting it since the age of 17. Other celebrities with addictions include Britney Spears, who has been linked to appetite suppressant and weight loss drugs Clenbuterol, Zantrex-3 and Topamax, as well as psychostimulant Adderall. Amy Winehouse is said to have taken Valium to calm her down after smoking crack, and Robbie Williams combined his tablet intake with excessive amounts of caffeine.

More often than not, it all begins rather harmlessly. Beans, Vike and Rid, as they are referred to by the stars themselves, are Hollywood’s favourite pills. One helps you fall asleep, the other wakes you up in the morning, and the third puts a smile on your face regardless of your troubles. Lindsay Lohan is said to be a fan of Adderall, an amphetamin-based stimulant, which can produce an effect similar to speed when cut up and snorted. It creates the feeling of being awake and concentrated for up to nine hours, as well as surpressing hunger. The drug is banned in many countries because it can lead to psychotic episodes, aggression and even a heart attack. The press have speculated that this addiction and her on/off relationship with DJ Samantha Ronson have caused Lohan’s drastic weight-loss. According to Lohan’s father, the actress is said to have been taking similar medication to Heath Ledger prior to his death – Oxycontin for pain relief, Ambien for sleep and Xanax for combatting depression. She is said to have already spent around 5 million US dollars on her dependency.

Britney Spears

Britney Spears takes Topamax, Zantrex-3 and Clenbuterol to lose weight

Another shocking confession came from actress Jamie Lee Curtis recently, through an internet blog on Michael Jackson’s prescription drug addiction. Following a cosmetic proceedure 15 years ago, Curtis became dependent on morphine. She says: “Morphine became like a hot bath for me. In it, I could escape from painful reality“. The actress says she is now clean.

30-year-old Fall Out Boy singer Pete Wentz has often been heard praising his sleeping pill of choice, Ambien, without which he allegedly can’t sleep for longer than one hour. Yet even Wentz warns of side effects such as hallucinations: “Four months ago, I nearly set fire to the house“. Similarly, Eminem refused to give up Methadone, used to wean addicts off heroin, even after a near-overdose. The rapper says: “My doctor told me that the amount I took was the equivalent of four packets of heroin and still it didn’t click“.

The days of snorting cocaine in backrooms are gone. Stimulant medication like Adderall are cheaper and legal with a prescription. In 2007, Paris Hilton promptly got a prescription for Adderall as treatment for ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder). Doctors that are more willing to give out prescriptions become popular in celebrity circles. Michael Jackson’s sinister skin doctor, Arnold Klein, is said to have also supplied “Star Wars“ actress Carrie Fischer and Hollywood diva Elizabeth Taylor with strong prescription-only pills. Both were friends of Jackson and both had a dependency on the tablets. Those who have not been able to befriend a doctor, such as Kate Moss, buy pills at drug parties or simply over the internet. Since 2006, the number of websites offering prescription-only medication has risen by 70% – most sites do not ask for a doctor’s prescription.

But thankfully, help is at hand. Celebrities with drug problems need to undergo addiction counselling as part of a complete addiction treatment program to help them get rid of the drugs in their system.

Other celebrities with addictions include Melane Griffith, Michael Jackson, Lindsay Lohan, Charlton Heston, Betty Ford, Burt Reynolds and DJ AM.

Matthew Perry

Painkiller Addiction

Updated December 14, 2009

Getty Images/Jason Merritt
As America sat back and watched Matthew Perry play funnyman Chandler Bing on the sitcom Friends, the actor was battling a serious addiction with alcohol and painkillers. In his early 30's, Perry was at the top of his career -- a multimillion dollar salary on a hit television series with numerous offers for feature films and endorsements. However, fame comes at a high price, and for Perry, it resulted in an addiction to alcohol and the narcotic painkiller Vicodin.

Perry told People magazine in 2002 that at the lowest point of his addiction, he would take 20 to 30 Vicodin pills and consume a "quart of vodka a day." The addiction began when the star was prescribed the drug for wisdom tooth extraction. Eventually the abuse began to take its toll on his body. Rumors spread like wildfire that Perry had an eating disorder because of his weight fluctuations, which was actually due to pancreatitis -- an effect of heavy drinking. Perry returned to rehab for an "undisclosed illness" in 2001, following a stint 1997, and appears to have recovered from his addictions.

Perry's addiction ignited awareness about the dangers of heavy alcohol consumption and prescription drug abuse in young people. Pancreatitis is just one of many physical health effects of heavy alcohol and drug abuse that can develop in young people. As Perry told US Weekly in 2001, "You play, you pay."

Cannabis Use May Worsen Sexual Dysfunction, Rat Study Suggests

ScienceDaily (Feb. 23, 2011) — Rany Shamloul's recent review of the medical literature on cannabis use and sexual health has revealed that cannabis use may negatively impact male sexual performance.

"Cannabis is the most widely-used illicit drug globally," says Dr. Shamloul, a postdoctoral fellow in the Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology. "It is also often used by young, sexually active people who are unaware of the hazardous effects it may be having on their sexual health and performance."

Recent animal and in vitro studies have identified new negative connections between cannabis use and sexual dysfunction that may put an end to previous controversy.

While it was previously known that cannabis could affect certain receptors in the brain, it's now believed that these receptors also exist in the penis. Cannabis use may have an antagonizing effect on these receptors in the penis, making it more difficult for a man to achieve and maintain an erection.

"These findings will change the current understanding of the magnitude of the impact of cannabis use on sexual health," says Dr. Shamloul.

Previous studies examining the effects of cannabis use on male sexual function have been limited and many of these studies have produced contradictory results. While some studies have indicated cannabis could have beneficial effects in enhancing erectile function, other studies have found the opposite.

Dr. Shamloul's research will appear in an upcoming issue of the Journal of Sexual Medicine.


The above story is reprinted (with editorial adaptations by ScienceDaily staff) from materials provided by Queen's University.

Journal Reference:

  1. Rany Shamloul, Anthony J. Bella. Impact of Cannabis Use on Male Sexual Health. The Journal of Sexual Medicine, 2011; DOI: 10.1111/j.1743-6109.2010.02198.x
APA

MLA
Queen's University (2011, February 23). Cannabis use may worsen sexual dysfunction, rat study suggests. ScienceDaily. Retrieved February 23, 2011, from http://www.sciencedaily.com­ /releases/2011/02/110222122212.htm?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+sciencedaily+%28ScienceDaily%3A+Latest+Science+News%29

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